
70% of Care Home Residents Have Dementia, But Are Staff Working Well With Their Families Too?
By Satya Cashman, Partnerships Manager for national charity Dementia Carers Count (www.dementiacarers.org.uk)
Here at Dementia Carers Count we’re supporting professional carers, looking after increasing numbers of people with dementia. Day in, day out, we provide emotional advice and practical support to family carers, as they cope with the challenges of dementia care. Those challenges don’t stop when a loved one moves to a care home. They change.
And what many families tell us is, they would like better support from the professional carers they meet.
In fact, of the 1,300 family dementia carers who responded to our 2023 survey, only one third agreed that paid carers understood their needs. This is worrying, given the best possible person-centred care is only possible through working in partnership with families.
With estimates of the number of professional carers receiving dementia training as low as 29%1, it could be that some carers just don’t have the training or practical experience to support families well. But most care homes invest in regular dementia training, and a host of other professional requirements. Despite this, many families are not confident about paid carers’ understanding of dementia. Only around a quarter (27%) of our 2024 survey respondents said that paid carers had a ‘good understanding of dementia and dementia care2.
So, what could you do differently to ensure your busy, committed and hard-working team have everything they need to support residents and families with the care and compassion you’d want?
Well, whilst you’re busy arranging shift patterns, cover, inspections, visits and the rest, it’s easy to overlook problems with the current basic training model:
1. Dementia has so many presentations, and no one prognosis, affecting every person differently. To provide high-quality, person-centred care for people with dementia, you need a wide range of knowledge from a broad practice base.
2. Staff churn is challenging for any care business. But all too often, staff move on because they don’t feel confident or supported by low-quality training, when they do face those challenging situations.
3. It’s tough getting carers together for a whole or half day of training. Arranging shift patterns and cover, transport from other sites, or managing sickness and emergencies.
At Dementia Carers Count, we understand the pressures you face and the genuine commitment you have to your residents. As a dedicated charity, our mission is to improve support for anyone caring for someone with dementia. That’s why we’ve developed short, regular interventions, delivered live by trainers with experience and insight, to help your staff understand all the dimensions of expert dementia care for your clients and their families.
Our 90-minute format minimises disruption to your schedules, while maximising learning outcomes. These focused sessions share genuinely useful knowledge in an accessible and engaging way. And as all our CPD accredited training comes from years of experience supporting carers, you can feel confident you’re your staff will learn from the very best.
What’s more, proceeds from our training go to our work for family carers across the UK. When you work with us, you’re supporting your team and your local community.
To speak to Satya and find out more about training – visit www.dementiacarers.org.uk/what-we-do/dementia-training